The Shining City Upon a Hill
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
...what election fraud are you talking abut? What election fraud has been exposed?
... which Democrats have crossed the floor in the last 100 days to join the Republicans?Comment
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
So you don't like the truth. Your opinion does not change the facts. If liberals like you really believed the black lives mattered you would be protesting every Planned Parenthood abortion center in or near black communities. They kill more blacks in a week than the police do in a year.
... what truth do I not like?
... According to the Supreme Court, in Roe vs Wade, Planned Parenthood has never killed a single person. They provide abortion services to women with unborn fetuses.Comment
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
see that the thing about you socialist type you ASSUme I am a Qanon person... you couldn't be further from the truth.... as far as the obscene part that's the glorious thing about being and American we have 1st amendment rights... I have never yelled fire in a theater .. but I do speak my mind ...
great that's the truth .. she hasn't been to the border and she hasn't held a presser about the border and they STILL say there is no crisis .. but again I didn't get the story from fox .. yes fox was referenced in the article...
funny thing is you never notice when I quote CNN - NYT ..just proves what a bigot you are are.. just like most socialists you pick n choose what amendments you want to follow.
as for my blame everything on biden... you did the same damn thing for FOUR YEARS with Trump and alot of it has been debunked... proving CNN/MSNBC/NYT lied to y'all but you still swear by their reporting .....
biden gave muslim countries that have vowed DEATH to AMERICA ..and Israel and a few days later Hamas started the conflict all over again.
he has pushed for radical crap only to find out that someone(s) on his cabinet OWNS major stocks in those companies
he give his VP a job to do then she is flying all over the world and NOT even going to look at the situation she was assigned to handle.
he shuts down work on the XL pipeline then lifts sanctions on Russia to finish their pipeline to Germany ...
and the list goes on and on
my language .. do words hurt you that much ? I am not here to make friends .. but to inform others... but you seem to worry about how people perceive you... people don't care ... really don't care.. and I don't care what you guys think of me either.
what news groups would you like to read articles from? CNN refuses to cover anything pro conservative
... the obscene part just stinks up the pages of CTN. It means you take a perverse pleasure in "flaming" anyone who opposes you.Comment
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
it's not just in the last 100 days that they've switched parties..... https://youtu.be/cci0hrDqDYwComment
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
"Flaming is the act of posting insults, often including profanity or other offensive language, on the internet. This term should not be confused with the term trolling, which is the act of someone going online, or in person, and causing discord. Flaming emerged from the anonymity that Internet forums provide cover for users to act more aggressively. Anonymity can lead to disinhibition, which results in the swearing, offensive, and hostile language characteristic of flaming. Lack of social cues, less accountability of face-to-face communications, textual mediation and deindividualization are also likely factors. Deliberate flaming is carried out by individuals known as flamers, which are specifically motivated to incite flaming. These users specialize in flaming and target specific aspects of a controversial conversation."Comment
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
... flaming is pretty much all that you do most of the time!
"Flaming is the act of posting insults, often including profanity or other offensive language, on the internet. This term should not be confused with the term trolling, which is the act of someone going online, or in person, and causing discord. Flaming emerged from the anonymity that Internet forums provide cover for users to act more aggressively. Anonymity can lead to disinhibition, which results in the swearing, offensive, and hostile language characteristic of flaming. Lack of social cues, less accountability of face-to-face communications, textual mediation and deindividualization are also likely factors. Deliberate flaming is carried out by individuals known as flamers, which are specifically motivated to incite flaming. These users specialize in flaming and target specific aspects of a controversial conversation."
no flaming just the truth
where did you copy and paste that from? state your sourceComment
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
... you are using the Mississippi Republican party meeting as you proof that there was 2020 election fraud? Biased much?
In the background you can see msgop.org .
You got to try a lot harder than that!Comment
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
No, he's suggesting what white liberals are putting as many abortion clinics as possible in black neighborhoods to decrease the black population.
"Birth Control or Race Control? Sanger and the Negro Project"
The Negro Project, instigated in 1939 by Margaret Sanger, was one of the first major undertakings of the new Birth Control Federation of America (BCFA), the product of a merger between the American Birth Control League and Sanger's Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau, and one of the more controversial campaigns of the birth control movement. Developed by white birth control reformers, who consulted with African-Americans for help in promoting the project only well after its inception, the Negro Project and associated campaigns were, nevertheless, widely supported by such black leaders as Mary McLeod Bethune, W. E. B. DuBois, and Rev. Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Influenced strongly by both the eugenics movement and the progressive welfare programs of the New Deal era, the Negro Project was, from the start, largely indifferent to the needs of the black community and constructed in terms and with perceptions that today smack of racism.
By the late 1930s, the birth control activists began to focus on high birth rates and poor quality of life in the South, alerted to alarming Southern poverty by a 1938 U.S. National Resource Committee report which asserted that Southern poverty drained resources from other parts of the country. Starting in the mid-1930s, Sanger sent field workers into the rural South to establish birth control services in poor communities and conduct research. She sought to test various contraceptive jellies and foam powders to see if they could effectively be used without a diaphragm, which would be cheaper and easier for poor women to use. Physician and philanthropist Clarence Gamble (1894-1966), who was on a quest to find the best birth control for the "uneducated masses," funded and supervised several of these rural Southern projects. The birth control movement also looked to Southern states as the ideal region in which to secure funding under New Deal legislation and to establish birth control services as part of state and federal public health programs. These birth control initiatives were designed, in part, to demonstrate to government bureaucrats on the county, state and federal levels that contraceptive clinics were essential in impoverished Southern communities and could be successfully duplicated in other regions.
In 1937, North Carolina became the first state to incorporate birth control services into a statewide public health program, followed by six other southern states. However, these successes were clouded by the failure of birth controllers to overcome segregated health services and improve African-Americans' access to contraceptives. Hazel Moore, a veteran lobbyist and health administrator, ran a birth control project under Sanger's direction and found that black women in several Virginia counties were very responsive to birth control education. A 1938 trip to Tennessee further convinced Sanger of the desire of African-Americans in that region to control their fertility and the need for specific programs in birth control education aimed at the black community. (Hazel Moore, "Birth Control for the Negro," 1937, Sophia Smith Collection, Florence Rose Papers.)
In 1939 Sanger teamed with Mary Woodward Reinhardt, secretary of the newly formed BCFA, to secure a large donor to fund an educational campaign to teach African-American women in the South about contraception. Sanger, Reinhardt and Sanger's secretary, Florence Rose, drafted a report on "Birth Control and the Negro," skillfully using language that appealed both to eugenicists fearful of unchecked black fertility and progressives committed to shepherding African-Americans into middle-class culture. The report stated that "[N]egroes present the great problem of the South," as they are the group with "the greatest economic, health and social problems," and outlined a practical birth control program geared toward a population characterized as largely illiterate and that "still breed carelessly and disastrously," a line borrowed from a June 1932 Birth Control Review article by W.E.B. DuBois. Armed with this paper, Reinhardt initiated contact between Sanger and Albert Lasker (soon to be Reinhardt's husband), who pledged $20,000 starting in Nov. 1939. ("Birth Control and the Negro," July 1939, Lasker Papers)
However, once funding was secured, the project slipped from Sanger's hands. She had proposed that the money go to train "an up and doing modern minister, colored, and an up and doing modern colored medical man" at her New York clinic who would then tour "as many Southern cities and organizations and churches and medical societies as they can get before" and "preach and preach and preach!" She believed that after a year of such "educational agitation" the Federation could support a "practical campaign for supplying mothers with contraceptives." Before going in and establishing clinics, Sanger thought it critical to gain the support and involvement of the African-American community (not just its leaders) and establish a foundation of trust. Her proposal derived from the work of activists in the field, discussions with black leaders and her experience with the New York clinics. Sanger understood the concerns of some within the black community about having Northern whites intervene in the most intimate aspect of their lives. "I do not believe" she warned, "that this project should be directed or run by white medical men. The Federation should direct it with the guidance and assistance of the colored group – perhaps, particularly and specifically formed for the purpose." To succeed, she wrote, "It takes a very strong heart and an individual well entrenched in the community. . . ." (MS to Gamble, Nov. 26, 1939, and MS to Robert Seibels, Feb. 12, 1940 [MSM S17:514, 891].)
Sanger reiterated the need for black ministers to head up the project in a letter to Clarence Gamble in Dec. 1939, arguing that: "We do not want word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population and the minister is the man who can straighten out that idea if it ever occurs to any of their more rebellious members." This passage has been repeatedly extracted by Sanger's detractors as evidence that she led a calculated effort to reduce the black population against their will. From African-American activist Angela Davis on the left to conservative commentator Dinesh D'Souza on the right, this statement alone has condemned Sanger to a perpetual waltz with Hitler and the KKK. Davis quoted the incendiary passage in her 1983 Women, Race and Class, claiming that the Negro Project "confirmed the ideological victory of the racism associated with eugenic ideas." D'Souza used the quote to buttress erroneous claims that Sanger called blacks "human weeds" and a "menace to civilization" in his best-selling 1995 book The End of Racism. The argument that Sanger co-opted black clergy and community leaders to exterminate their own race not only gives Sanger unwarranted credit as a remarkably cunning manipulator, but also suggests that African-Americans were passive receptors of birth control reform, incapable of making their own decisions about family size; and that black leaders were ignorant and gullible.
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
this just proves you don't read/watch what i post but more over how much of a news bigot you really areComment
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
... Democrats are shaking in fear. There was not a single person of color in that video.
Smith County 16,000 people
Covington County 18,631 people
If Georgia is the epitome of the “New South,” Mississippi remains very much still the old South: a conservative stronghold where the GOP is composed almost exclusively of white voters, and the Democratic Party of Black voters.
... this just proves that you desperately clutch at any straw you can find to support your unconvincing arguments.Comment
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